The Plays and Poems of William Shakspeare, with the Corrections and Illustrations of Various Commentators: Comprehending a Life of the Poet, and an Enlarged History of the Stage, Volume 6 |
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Page 32
Signior Martino , and his wife , and daughters ; County Anselme , and his beauteous sisters ; The lady widow of Vitruvio ; Signior Placentio , and his lovely nieces ; Mercutio , and his brother Valentine ; Mine uncle Capulet , his wife ...
Signior Martino , and his wife , and daughters ; County Anselme , and his beauteous sisters ; The lady widow of Vitruvio ; Signior Placentio , and his lovely nieces ; Mercutio , and his brother Valentine ; Mine uncle Capulet , his wife ...
Page 58
E 3 : stand at your brothers backe , as to shift a trencher neately , " & c . REED . 6 ― They were common even in the time of Charles I. See Tempest , Act II . Sc . II . MALONE . They continued common much longer in many publick ...
E 3 : stand at your brothers backe , as to shift a trencher neately , " & c . REED . 6 ― They were common even in the time of Charles I. See Tempest , Act II . Sc . II . MALONE . They continued common much longer in many publick ...
Page 61
Thus in Hamlet , the King his uncle and step - father addresses him with : " But now my cousin Hamlet and my son . ” And in this very play , Act III . Lady Capulet says : " Tybalt my cousin ! -O my brother's child .
Thus in Hamlet , the King his uncle and step - father addresses him with : " But now my cousin Hamlet and my son . ” And in this very play , Act III . Lady Capulet says : " Tybalt my cousin ! -O my brother's child .
Page 129
-O my brother's child ! Unhappy sight ! ah me , the blood is spill'd ' In the first copy - O ! I am fortune's slave . STEEVENS . 5 Which way ran he ? ] Instead of these four speeches , it is thus in quarto 1597 : " Ben .
-O my brother's child ! Unhappy sight ! ah me , the blood is spill'd ' In the first copy - O ! I am fortune's slave . STEEVENS . 5 Which way ran he ? ] Instead of these four speeches , it is thus in quarto 1597 : " Ben .
Page 171
This passage sufficiently explains how the earth , in the quotation from The Rape of Lucrece , may be said to weep . STEEVENS . But for the sunset of my brother's son , It SC . V. 171 ROMEO AND JULIET . Enter CAPULET and Nurse. ...
This passage sufficiently explains how the earth , in the quotation from The Rape of Lucrece , may be said to weep . STEEVENS . But for the sunset of my brother's son , It SC . V. 171 ROMEO AND JULIET . Enter CAPULET and Nurse. ...
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ancient appears bear beauty better brother called Capulet cause comes common copy daughter dead death doth DUKE edition editors Enter eyes face fair father fear folio fool Fortune Friar give hand hart hast hath head hear heart heaven hence hope hour JOHNSON Juliet King lady leave light live look lord lovers MALONE married master means nature never night NURSE observed old copy once Orlando Paris passage perhaps play poor pray present prince quarto rest Romeo Romeus Rosalind scene seems sense serve Shakspeare sight speak speech stand stay STEEVENS sweet tears tell thee theyr thing thou thou art thought TOUCH true Tybalt unto young youth